Is war ever justified? I take that question head-on—and I don’t duck it.
I walk through the idea of a “just war”—not as politics, but through faith, history, and moral responsibility. Because if you believe in protecting innocent life, you have to ask: what do you do when evil is real, active, and deadly?
I break down how faith—whether Christianity or Judaism—doesn’t demand passivity in the face of violence. It demands discernment. Wars of aggression are wrong. But wars to stop slaughter, terrorism, and mass destruction? That’s a different question entirely.
Using real-world examples—including the threat posed by regimes pursuing nuclear weapons—I explain why preventative action can be morally justified when the danger is clear and the consequences of inaction are catastrophic.
I also dig into history—from World War II to the Cold War—to show that confronting evil has often been the only way to stop it. Because sometimes, as hard as it is to accept, the alternative to war is far worse.
This isn’t theory. It’s a moral reality—and one we ignore at our own peril.
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